Bulletin University of New Mexico—No. 49 
about half as long as the pod which is rather short, di- 
verging, pointed with a slender style; seeds with a nar- 
row margin. ‘Tijeras Canon. 
7. Capsetta, Medic. (Shepherd’s Purse.) 
Smooth or pubescent annuals with toothed or pinnat- 
-ifid leaves and short obcordate pods. 
C.Bursa-Pastoris, Meonch. Radical leaves mostly 
runcinate-pinnatifid, Cauline lanceolate and auricled 
at base. Introduced from Europe. About yards in 
town, not common as in the East. 
8. L.eprpium. Pepper Grass. 
Annuals or biennals with pinnatifid or toothed or 
entire leaves, tapering at the base. Pods rounded, 2- 
winged at summit so as to appear notched. 
L. montanum, Nutt. Mountain P. 
Decumbent, many branches from a long somewhat 
woody root spreading in a circular manner; radical 
leaves more or less pinnatifid, upper trifid or entire; 
pods indistinctly reticulated, elliptical slightly emargi- 
nate, wingless, with a conspicuous style. Sandia 
Mountains, Rim-Rock towards the southward. Habit 
of growth much like an Arabis. 
L. EastwooptaE, Wooton. Has no compound leaves 
but most of them are very sharply cut into long lobes, 
from oblanceolate to oblong-linear in outline; lower 2 
in. long, petioled, upper entire small and sessile. San- 
dia Mts. 
9. Briscuretta, LZ. (Spectacle Pod.) 
Erect, hispid or tomentose, branching herbs; valves 
or pods nearly orbicular. 
B. Wisuizen1, Watson. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, ta- 
pering into short petioles; repand, dentate; pedicles fili- 
form 1-2 to 2-3 in. long, longer than the flower or fruit; 
flower about 1-4 in. in diameter; pods 1-2 in. or less in 
width and about as high, deeply cordate at base. Not 
rare along the edge of the mesa and in sandy places in 
the valley. 
47. FUMARIACEAE, Fumirory Famiry. 
Delicate smooth herbs, with compound dissected 
leaves; irregular flowers, two small scale-like sepals, 
four petals in two pairs, the outer with spreading tips, 
and one or both spurred or saccate base, the inner 
with crested tips united over the stigma; 6 stamens 
in 2 sets of 3 each; 1-celled few to many-seeded pods. 
The “Dutchman’s Breeches” of the east and the “Bleed- 
(79) 
